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10 result(s) for "Rothman, Aaron,"
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Signal noise
The culmination of a decade of work in the American West, 'Signal Noise' presents an open-ended meditation on our desire to connect with the natural world, and the limits of our abilities to do so. Photographs altered with unconventional digital processing ask us to reflect on the nature of individual perceptual experience and the impact of our collective presence in the landscape. The images in Signal Noise are rooted in Rothman's response to places familiar and meaningful to him, but his interest lies in the transformative rather than the documentary nature of photography. Landscapes overtaken by digital noise, layering, erasure, amplification, and interference examine the blurry boundaries between natural and artificial, between real and virtual, and between the world and how we perceive it. Interspersed views of desert mountain vistas and dense forests, made with fallibly perfect photographic clarity, anchor the work in the space of the physical world while also casting doubt about what is real and what is a figment of photographic, perceptual or human alteration.
A Lifetime of Activism
\"She teaches first grade. She teaches kids to read,\" [Aaron Keyak] said. \"There's some range of the students she has, but there's a lot of inner-city kids whose parents sometimes send them to school with candy bars for breakfast. ... So my mom ends up doing a lot of parenting. You don't really think about it when you're younger, but when you look back you see that she clearly made the choice to make change happen on an individual level.\" \"It was always interesting to see the interaction between my mom, who comes from more of a political background, and my dad, who's an engineer,\" Keyak said. \"He was active but he's very practical. We'll be talking and he'll cut right through the double-speak.\" Keyak said he's looking forward to focusing on more local issues in his work for [Steven Rothman]. \"Congressman Rothman is a leader on a lot of the issues I really care about, but he's also able to have a real influence on his constituents' lives,\" Keyak said. \"I think that's a lot more tangible.\"
Boynton Beach, Fla.-Area Development Is Built around Orthodox Lifestyle
[Aaron Itzkowitz], his wife and three children are among the first families to move into Wyndsong Estates, a 55-home community that has scratched out such a niche in the housing market west of Boynton Beach that its developers are planning a spin-off community just up the road. Boca Raton-based Paramount Residential says it will build a 50-home community on 12 acres at Boynton Beach Boulevard and El Clair Ranch Road. Other developers have failed to bring buyers to condominiums tailored for the Jewish lifestyle. But Paramount Residential says Wyndsong Estates works because it's not exclusive. Anyone can buy a home there and add the \"gourmet kitchen,\" said Fred Rothman, Paramount Residential president. [Sholom Ciment], in fact, had a role in helping the developer define what Jewish buyers might need in a home. Ciment promotes Wyndsong to congregants, and Paramount Residential promotes the synagogue to potential buyers.
Gator Prize recognizes service to local Jewish community
  Hillel Executive Director Keith Dvorchik described the award as \"a way for us to say 'thank you' to the people who have given so much of themselves to help the Jewish students at the University of Florida.\" In an effort to be social and belong to a Jewish community, [Harvey Budd] became involved with UF Hillel when he became a student in 1965. And it was at Hillel where Budd met Ilene Silverman, his wife of more than 27 years. \"There's a lot of pleasure I get out of helping this institution survive and prosper,\" said Budd, a Gainesville broadcaster and former owner of the Gainesville CBS affiliate WGFL-TV.
Gator Prize recognizes service to local Jewish community
Hillel Executive Director Keith Dvorchik described the award as \"a way for us to say 'thank you' to the people who have given so much of themselves to help the Jewish students at the University of Florida.\" \"There's a lot of pleasure I get out of helping this institution survive and prosper,\" added [Harvey Budd], a Gainesville broadcaster and former owner of the Gainesville CBS affiliate WGFL-TV. \"I felt I was doing something good and something right,\" [Howard Rothman] said, \"and that's its own reward.\"
Gator Prize recognizes service to local Jewish community
Hillel Executive Director Keith Dvorchik described the award as \"a way for us to say 'thank you' to the people who have given so much of themselves to help the Jewish students at the University of Florida.\" In an effort to be social and belong to a Jewish community, [Harvey Budd] became involved with UF Hillel when he became a student in 1965. And it was at Hillel where Budd met Ilene Silverman, his wife of more than 27 years. \"There's a lot of pleasure I get out of helping this institution survive and prosper,\" said Budd, a Gainesville broadcaster and former owner of the Gainesville CBS affiliate WGFL-TV.
Wedding unites families of Albuquerque
[Ann Rothman] is a cousin of the extensive Albuquerque Keleher clan. Her brother is Albuquerque developer Jim Rogers. [Ashley Rothman] is a teacher at Manzano Day School, a private elementary school. Many members of \"old Albuquerque\" attended the wedding, including the extended Keleher family: Bill and Jan Keleher, Tom and Gretchen Keleher, and Mike and Peggy Keleher, of Albuquerque, and John and Linda Keleher of Aspen, Colo. JUNE IS WEDDING SEASON: June is the traditional month for weddings and new beginnings and this June is no exception. On Saturday, tireless Albuquerque civic leader Angie Vachio is planning to wed her handsome beau, Albuquerque businessman David Wohlert, during a large and festive ceremony at the National Hispanic Cultural Center.
DEVELOPMENTS ARE BUILT AROUND ORTHODOX LIFESTYLE LARGER KITCHENS MAKE KEEPING KOSHER EASIER
PHOTO MAP; COOKING: [Shoshana Wirtschafter] of Boynton Beach, with help from daughters Daniella, 5, and Rebecca, 2, enjoys the kosher kitchen with two sinks, two stoves and two dishwashers at Wyndsong Estates. The five-minute walk to Chabad Lubavitch is also a reason her family bought one of the 55 homes there. Staff photo/Carline Jean Map: Locates Wyndsong Estates in west Boynton. Staff graphic